Nearly
a decade after the Black Cat raids and Stonewall riots that launched
the Gay Liberation Movement, police continued to harass gay businesses
and individuals. For instance, a short article within this July 1978
issue of Honcho
(which has been broken into two parts) discusses an incident in
September of 1977 where a street performance in Greenwich Village
resulted in a verbal altercation between gay attendees and the police,
prompting Captain Aaron Rosenthal to publicly reprimand his officers for
their behavior. Likewise, in Gavin McMillian’s short story “Pool Table
Poker,” the empty bar which Jeff enters has been closed due to police
raids. As the owner relates: “We got raided last night. Seems there was
some kind of disagreement with the cops about our liquor license. It’s
no big deal. We’ll be opening up again tomorrow.” Outside of these two
features attesting to the lingering animosities between the gay
community and law enforcement, the majority of this issue is devoted to
athleticism and the “chauvinistic, all-male domain called the locker
room [where] fantasy and reality blend provocatively.” Contained in this second half (see the first half here) are images from the Falcon book Dynamo, a short biography on Arnold Schwarzenegger, and photos of Puerto
Rican boxers Carlos and Juan, Russian
bodybuilder Alexei Korshakovska, and Scottish highlander Thomas MacDougal.
No comments:
Post a Comment